Thanks to road boosters in the suburbs of Washington, DC, another highway bridge across the Potomac River — part of an old plan for a second beltway around the nation’s capital — is still officially a possibility.

While an outer beltway was rejected decades ago, highway segments like the Intercounty Connector were built in the ensuing years, which could be connected to form a circumferential expressway. Last month, the push to extend that highway across the Potomac got a boost when the National Capital Regional Transportation Planning Board voted to study a new crossing between Maryland and Virginia.

Officials on different sides of the river are at odds over building the bridge. The state of Maryland, as well as representatives from Montgomery and Prince George’s counties, oppose the project along with regional smart-growth advocates. Meanwhile, northern Virginia business and development groups are aligned with the American Automobile Association and Loudoun County legislators to support it.

Not everyone in Loudon County is for the project. The nexus of local legislators and developers has some residents concerned, particularly after a county board of supervisors meeting earlier this summer relied almost exclusively on the Northern Virginia Transportation Alliance, a business-backed pro-highway group, for its information.

“I’m not questioning [the Board of Supervisors] ethics or integrity at all, but when the only information you’re getting is from developers, I don’t know how you make a good decision,” county resident Diana Bendit told the Loudoun Times-Mirror.

The regional Transportation Planning Board’s vote doesn’t necessarily move the bridge closer to construction, since the metropolitan planning organization can’t bind jurisdictions with its decisions, but it has helped reanimate the mistaken belief that suburb-to-suburb highways will cure the Washington region’s traffic.

On the Virginia side, the bridge would likely serve as a northern extension of Route 28, a circumferential highway in the Fairfax County suburbs that’s already effectively a beltway beyond the Capital Beltway. In addition to the new crossing, widening Route 28 has been in NVTA’s sights for years.

Route 28 is also an issue that motivates local politicians, including Danica Roem, a Democrat challenging 13-term Republican state legislator Bob Marshall. While Roem, a transgender woman, opposes Marshall’s anti-transgender “bathroom bill,” the centerpiece of her campaign is a push to add more freeway-style interchanges to Route 28. WUSA-9 conducted an interview with Roem behind the wheel of her car last week, with the headline, “Transgender candidate just wants to get rid of traffic.”

“You could make history,” the reporter tells Roem from the back seat.

“Yeah, when I finally fix Route 28, that will be historic,” Roem shot back.

As long as political hopefuls like Roem see highways as the solution to traffic — despite ample evidence to the contrary — we’ll continue to have zombie projects like the new Potomac crossing shambling onward in obscure regional planning meetings, waiting for someone to get into office and fund them.

Update: This story has been updated. Roem says she wants more freeway-style interchanges along the existing section of Route 28, but opposes extending the highway across the Potomac River “because it would be a developer’s road, not one designed to alleviate our commutes.”

There are so few transgender candidates for office that her gender is newsworthy. Also, her position on the freeway makes her sound like she is right of center. Her left-of-center position on the “bathroom bill” provides some perspective. Those are just my opinions. I’m not part of the streetsblog staff.

Personally, I just wish politicians wouldn’t pander to the “just build more roads so I can imagine you are addressing traffic without me having to engage my brain and actually learn something” crowd.

Her gender identity can be newsworthy on its own without being tacked on to her position on an outer beltway. She’s a candidate that’s for new interchanges on 28 but not a new Potomac crossing–simple as that. A *candidate*.

Why not use Point of Rocks as the crossing? Run 28 to Route 7 West, and then 15 up to POR? 15 in MD can be widened with not too much impact and the route could hook into 270/70. Not a perfect solution, but the roads and the crossing are there, and 15 badly needs to be expanded.

Would an outer beltway really be all that bad? It would alleviate a lot of congestion within the existing beltway and I don’t think a new bridge crossing would be bad either under certain conditions between localities.

All a new Potomac bridge crossing would do is subsidize development and create induced demand on already burdened roadways. Plus, what’s a project like that going to cost? A LOT I suspect. That funding could be better spent. I hope the transportation planning board is going to consider the price-tag in their “study”.

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